Orangish-brown gem / THU 2-2-23 / Holiday dependent on the lunisolar calendar / Mythological being with a horse's tail / collar iconic Ruth Bader Ginsburg neckwear at the Smithsonian / One of the two main ingredients in idli
Thursday, February 2, 2023
Constructor: Elise Corbin
Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
DREAD (1A: Pit-of-the-stomach feeling)AISLES (9A: Wedding walkways)REACH (20A: Get through to)KITTY (21A: Pool of money)MARIA (40A: Natalie Wood's role in 1961's "West Side Story")AIDES (42A: Capitol Hill staffers)TAUNT (54A: Make fun of)TRIAL (56A: Error's counterpart)EASTER (69A: Holiday dependent on the lunisolar calendar)RAILS (71A: Train tracks)
To express her disapproval over a court ruling, Ginsburg opted for a black bib necklace with rhinestones by Banana Republic. The dark colors and punk-inspired design certainly stood out from her collection of predominantly white lace jabots. "It looks fitting for descent [sic!]," she told Couric. (Harper's Bazaar)
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[Live look at "distraction," aka Ida] |
The fill, on the other hand, is very wonky. Lots of short fill, lots of repeaters, lots of crosswordese, not a lot to lift it out of the tired and ordinary. HYSTERICS and DECK CHAIR are solid entries, but ESS ENT EMS NOUS STET ... there's just so much of that. Also ... there are ... well, just guess how many "IN"s there are in this puzzle? Without looking, what would you say? Hint, there are so many that I stopped counting at a ridiculous number, figuring that there's no way there could be more ... and then there was another ... and another. Bringing the total to [drum roll] SIX! To be clear, I'm never going to complain about an "IN" dupe if the "IN"s are not crossing and at least some distance away from one another. I might not even notice. The same is true with TO, AN, UP, ON, all your very short prepositions (or articles). But if you cross them, ick, no. And this puzzle crosses "IN"s ... *twice*!!! (WENT ALL IN x/w AS IN, PEER IN x/w EXCEL IN). And then there are just two more "IN"s (IN GENERAL, IN STORE). This is comically bad. I don't ... I ... yeah, someone will have to explain what the hell, because what the hell? You could have clued at least one of those answers in way that would make the "IN" disappear:
The worst thing, and hardest thing, in the puzzle is AROUSER (44D: One giving a wake-up call), because again, I ask, what the hell? "Stop being an AROUSER," he shouted, improbably, as he tried to go back to sleep. [One giving a wake-up call] is a hotel desk clerk or more likely a phone bot, neither of which I would (ever) call an AROUSER. Yeesh. Haven't seen SARD in a while. Ugly, ugly word, but it's real enough. No idea about DISSENT collar and nearly botched it because I thought 36A: Commercial lead-in to Clean (OXI) was OXY with a "Y"! OK, gotta run, the cat was calmly cleaning herself for a while there, but that time is now over and the stirring threatens to become something more mischievous, so I'll see you later.
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